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Building CORE

  • BY KRISTA DOSSETTI
  • PHOTOGRAPHY BY GARVIN TSO
  • November 9, 2017

“If at the center of a university is its students and faculty, at its core is knowledge.” 

— Dr. Leroy M. Morishita, President

The year is 2021, and the final touches are being put on Cal State Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV’s CORE building — digitized walls brought to life, virtual research stations readied, reflection and meditation areas staged, and the online reservation system for workstations and private rooms tested. Ground was broken on the building in 2019 and the university community, growing by leaps each year, has watched with anticipation as each beam, wall and window of the flagship edifice settled into place.

Once its doors open, CORE will transform the way students test and explore knowledge beyond the classroom, bringing a new heart of campus — both literally and figuratively — to life.

MORE THAN A BUILDING

 To say that Cal State Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV is one of the most diverse public institutions in the country means something different to those who actually walk its campus. From the outside, diversity might speak to the range of ethnicities on campus — the look of the students — or even the incredible number of first-generation graduates the university produces each year (60 percent in 2016).

“At Cal State Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV, we believe diversity is the answer to the urgent demand in the Bay Area and beyond for qualified industry professionals.”

But for the students and faculty who call Cal State Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV home, diversity is more than a statistic; it’s an engine. It drives discussion within classrooms, it poses questions inside research labs and it responds to global and national challenges from a distinct perspective. It fuels dreams and aspirations. It enriches our region and our world.

At Cal State Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV, we believe diversity is the answer to the urgent demand in the Bay Area and beyond for qualified industry professionals who are fluent in technology; can approach new digital tools with curiosity and confidence; work collaboratively; and who understand the inherent value of varied perspectives. Being able to enter those careers will likewise have a direct impact on our economy and surrounding communities, as more than half of Cal State Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV students are residents of Alameda and Contra Costa counties — and 80 percent of our graduates spend their careers here at home.

“There is research to show that industries that recruit and retain diverse employees tend to have better problem-solving, creative and teamwork skills,” says Edward Inch, provost and vice president of Academic Affairs.

CORE is a reflection of all those things. A purpose-built home for academic inquiry and exploration, designed to meet the future needs of our region and student population, and fulfill the things they strive to achieve. CORE is a nucleus of innovation that synthesizes the offerings of a traditional library with opportunities for students to test their coursework in the outside world; find critical services and assistance located in one place; take advantage of dedicated space for group projects, presentations and research; gain direct exposure to technologies that promote digital literacy and critical thinking skills; and consider questions of social justice and community engagement.

“This is the only place where we are actually creating an incubator-type environment that promotes inquiry beyond the classroom,” Inch says. “A place where students think and learn together to extend learning beyond their courses, beyond the curriculum and beyond disciplinary boundaries. A place purposely designed to promote student learning outside the classroom has not existed on this campus until now.”

OUR STUDENTS’ ASPIRATIONS

 A career at a hot tech startup. Work as a digital artist, project manager or physicist. To create life-saving drug therapies. Do research. Become an entrepreneur. Or a teacher. Or a social worker or computer programmer or data analyst.

Find a way to support their families and contribute to their communities.

No matter what our students aspire to do, the skills they need to enter the workforce are only partly found in the classroom. Being able to decipher fact from alternative fact in a complex digital world, collaborate with people from different backgrounds, and articulate ideas with clarity and conviction are what differentiates one job candidate from another.

“The CORE serves as a launch pad for our students’ personal and professional success in a knowledge-rich, technology-enhanced world,” Inch says. “It engages us as a community to grapple with the world’s great issues and challenges in new and engaging ways.”

“The CORE serves as a launch pad for our students’ personal and professional success in a knowledge-rich, technology-enhanced world.”

While hands-on learning opportunities and research have long been hallmarks of an education from Cal State Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV, CORE creates a landscape for students to hone the soft skill sets they need to be competitive in today’s world, while also accessing support in specific areas of need. For instance, librarian-taught digital literacy classes that give students a foundation for parsing vast quantities of information will be offered to all sophomores in CORE.

As well, CORE will be home to the university’s Student Center for Academic Achievement, which filled 15,000 requests for supplemental instruction tutoring during the 2016-17 academic year — a 36 percent increase from 2015. Given those numbers, the center will have a dedicated, purpose-built space that is immediately visible to students as they enter the building. 

It’s a well-deserved boost for a service that transforms personal outcomes, with analytics showing that an ongoing tutoring session of once per week can spike student performance by half a letter grade.

Veteran and student Caudrey Parker, who works full-time as a project engineer and will graduate in spring, knows the benefit firsthand. She was struggling to transition from serving in Afghanistan to daily life as a student when she decided to seek help with her studies.

“It’s a lifesaving service that anyone can use,” Parker says. “When I came across (my tutor) Richa, just as a walk-in, her ability to teach and say, ‘You’re going to know this’ was incredible. She had confidence where I didn’t have confidence. She had that strength every time I came in.”

THE LIBRARY OF TOMORROW

 The library has long been considered the “heart” or “core” of any university campus. By transforming Cal State Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV’s library to meet the needs of its students and faculty, CORE will become the intellectual hub of our university.

The need is urgent. Through a monitor at its entrance, 1.2 million visits to the library were counted in 2016, making it the busiest in the California State University system. Beyond that, the current university library, built in 1972, was meant to accommodate about half of today’s current student population.

Through a monitor at its entrance, 1.2 million visits to the library were counted in 2016, making it the busiest in the California State University system.

The way CORE will use space will also be vastly different — and more efficient. For example, rather than large static areas devoted to books and siloed services, CORE will showcase architectural flexibility, enabling spaces to be repurposed according to changing needs. It will also feature three times as many rooms dedicated to student use as the current library has, and only about 20 percent of Cal State Â鶹ÃÛÌÒAV’s books will make the transition: Those that are most important, most popular and most current will be placed in CORE, while the remainder stay in their current location. An online retrieval system is in the works. Technologies that exist on campus but are typically tied to departments will be a part of CORE as well. One possibility is “maker” labs where cross-disciplinary projects — perhaps media and business students working together to simulate a product launch — will come to life through shared resources such as a 3-D printer or plasma cutter.

While CORE offers pragmatic services that are increasingly essential to student success, Dean of University Libraries John Wenzler believes the new building will play an even greater role in enriching campus life.

“The library is a home away from home for our students,” Wenzler says. “Many of our students, especially with a large commuting population, spend most of their time on campus here. By making CORE the focus of the university’s attention, by creating an inspiring, innovative building, and by investing in a place at the center of their campus life, we are telling students how committed we are to their futures. And for faculty, we want to also give them an attractive new environment that draws them into the hub of campus and promotes interacting with each other and students in new and different ways.”